Improvement in bandage fob cheese



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H. N. KIM BALL, l WATERT WN, NEW YO RR.

Letters Patent No. 67,557, ale/ cal August 6, i857.

IMPROVEMENT IN BANDAGBFOR GHEESE.

TO VHOM IT MAY CONCERN;

Be it known that I, H. N. KIMBALL, of Watertown, in the countyof-Jeii'erson, and State of New York, have inventedeertain newn/mluseful Improvements in Cheese-Bandages; and I hereby declare thefollowing to be a full, clear, and exact description of the same.

In the manufacture of cheese, the ordinary bandages used in factoriesfoi' binding and holding in shape the choose, as Welles protecting itfrom injury, are made of cotton or some other textile fabric. There aredisadvantages, however, attending the use of these bandages whichgreatly detract from their utility. The cotton or other cloth is apt tostretch, thus allowing the cheese to sway and become misshapen, so thatits edges get bent and thrown out of proper form. i This is morenoticeable in rolls of large size, where the cheese is very often seento bulge or project out beyond the proper line. Another defect, and onewhich is a-source of much trouble and vexation to consumers as well asmanufacturers of cheese, is that the open or loose texture of the clothpermits flies to deposit their eggs under the bandage and in the cheese.The grubs or maggots which in process of time are hatched from theseeggs of course run through the cheese and detract greatly from "itsvalue.

The object of my invention is to produce a bandage which shall possessnone of these defects, and after considerable investigation I have foundthat the use of paper as a substitute for the cloth is followed by thebest results. As it is less elastic and ieldin than the cotton cloth,while in this articular connection it is v y g P quite strong enough forall practical purposes, it holds the cheese in perfect shape, preventingit from becoming lop-sided or misshapen, and keeping the edges straight.The closeness of the texture or fibre of the paper also prevents the flyfrom depositing her eggs in the cheese, thus effectually protecting thelatter from being injured by the fly-maggot. Another advantageresulting'from the use ofthe paper is its comparative cheapness; Itscost is not so great as that of the cloth bandage, while it is not anymore liable to become injured or torn, and is in all respects as durableas the latter. The kind of paper I have found best adapted to my purposeis what is commonly known as manilla paper, but, while I prefer thispaper on the whole, other kinds of paper, provided they be ofsuflicient. strength and have a close texture, can be employed withperhaps quite as good results. The paper bandage is applied to thecheese in the usual manner, and is manipulated and used in every respectlike an ordinary cloth bandage. It completely encircles or covers thecheese, and is not usedas accessory to but as a substitute for the clothbandage.

Having described my invention, and the manner in which the same is ormay be carried into eflect, what I claim, and desire to secure byLetters Patent, isi The application and use of paper as a bandage in themanufacture of cheese, substantially as herein specified.

In testimony whereof I have signed my name to this specification beforetwo subscribing witnesses.

H. N. KIMBALL.

Witnesses:

J. H. CAMP, M. THoMPsoN.

